Just a Park: Composition of Place

On the other side of this fence there is the park where I spent many great days. I remember going there when both of my little brothers were learning how to walk. I remember jumping from the swings, and falling from the monkey bars. I’d like to begin telling you about Juárez here. Like much of Juárez this park holds beautiful memories, but also some painful ones. Here’s the picture of the park the way I remember it:

This is the full picture of the park as it stands now:

Hopefully you don’t recognize what the structure to the left is, because it is a bunker. Yes, an actual bunker like the one you’d have in a war zone!

The reason the bunker is there is that right in front of this bunker is the house of the mayor of the city. So to protect him they built this box of concrete, right where children are supposed to play! His house is at the end of the fence that you see in the very first picture above, with the snow. The fence is there also to keep the Mayor on the “outside.” The neighbors did this in hopes that if there was ever a cross-fire, at least it would be easier for people to stay in the other side.

Fences, bunkers, fear… that is not what my city’s true self is. Let me direct you to my favorite part of this picture, let me really zoom in, past the fences, the empty bunker and even past the swings.

Yes! There is a child. The bunker is empty, and there is a child playing. The street you see just past the child is precisely one of the streets where the pope will pass through in his pope-mobile. I’d like to think that this child will be watching, with his back to that hideous bunker. When the pope visits Juárez I think I’ll pray for this child. I don’t actually know him, but I think I’ll pray for him. This kid is a symbol of hope for Juárez.